A gaggle of Ammonoids. Can you name them all?
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spent the snow day finishing off the first print with new blocks! think i’ve got a better hand on fabric printing without a press now.
i like that with these blocks i have the freedom to do different arrangements and color combos whereas my old block was just 1 solid rectangle that i had to tile
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Diploscaphites sp. (fossil ammonite) (Fox Hills Formation, Upper Cretaceous, 74 Ma; Meade County, South Dakota, USA) 2 by James St. John, Via Flickr
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Getting ready to put these into the shop! Do you have a favorite fossil? Ammonites are a subclass of animal and may look like a snail but are actually more closely related to octopus, squid and cuttlefish. Pin designed by @onioncakes #ammonite #fossils #pin #enamelpins #pindesigner #pincollector #pincollection #mollusk #devonian #devonianperiod #indexfossil #snail #snailshell #cephalopod #extinctanimals #prehistoricocean #prehistoric #ammonoids (at Scribbles Art Collective) https://www.instagram.com/p/CosqxmtyHaC/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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Famennian ammonoids
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SIDELINED SEASHELLS: REAPPRAISAL OF THE MIDDLE TRIASSIC AMMONOIDS OF SAMOBOR AND ŽUMBERAK MTS. (NORTH-WESTERN CROATIA) AND THEIR SYSTEMATICS AND BIOSTRATIGRAPHIC IMPLICATION
Published 7th September 2023
Ammonoid fossils from the Basinal Middle Triassic of the Samobor and Žumberak Mts in north-western Croatia are formally described and identified, revealing an impressive range of diversity within the region.
Topographic map of the Samobor and Žumberak Mts. area, The schematic stratigraphic columns of the localities of interest (1-late diagenetic dolostone, 2- shallower-water thick-bedded limestone, 3- thinly bedded, marly limestones, with occasional occurrences of chert and pyroclastic rocks, 4- grey to red nodular silicified limestone with lenses/layers of ammonitic limestone and pyroclastic rocks, 5- bedded hemipelagic limestone with cephalopods and juvenile pelagic bivalves, 6- radiolarian chert, 7- pyroclastic rocks, 8- occurrence of the bivalve Daonella, 9- occurrence of ammonoids)
Proportion of the ammonoid taxa from the historic collections of the relevant institutions
A list of examined ammonoid taxa collected from the red nodular limestone facies of the Gregurić Breg locality, A list of known ammonoid taxa collected at multiple neighbouring localities in the Žumberak Mts
examples of the described ammonoid fossils
source:
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Ammonoid Fossil
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you would be the ammonoid
THANK YOU !?
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SIDELINED SEASHELLS
SIDELINED SEASHELLS: REAPPRAISAL OF THE MIDDLE TRIASSIC AMMONOIDS OF SAMOBOR AND ŽUMBERAK MTS. (NORTH-WESTERN CROATIA) AND THEIR SYSTEMATICS AND BIOSTRATIGRAPHIC IMPLICATIONS https://riviste.unimi.it/index.php/RIPS/article/view/19942 [Middle Triassic ammonoids of Croatia.
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made a couple little embroidered & block printed handkerchiefs for the arts center valentines community show :)
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kinda obsessed with how prehistoric planet 2 was just like "look at these fucked up ammonoids this one has a 6 foot long pointy hat and this one looks like a paperclip. isnt that crazy" and then didnt explain at all why they evolved weird shells and moved on
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do you think you could make the gaggle of ammonoids a tiling image so i can make themn my lovely desktop background maybe. if you feel like it. thank you i love them
Sorry for the delay in response! I've actually had a couple of folks ask me for this, along with a couple of folks who made tiles of their own. Here's my own tile that I made for some cool new merch coming up soon. Feel free to use for your personal desktop or mobile background!
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Wet Woodward Wednesday
Welcome one and all to Woodward Wednesdays, where we celebrate the works of Alice B. Woodward, possibly the earliest female paleoartist to restore a wide range taxa in works of undeniable artistic - not just scientific - merit. Today I'll walk you through Paleozoic underwater scenes she drew for Evolution in the Past (1912).
The first one depicts the Cambrian, and any modern lover of paleoart is probably going to ask what exactly is Cambrian about it? Where are the big stars of Burgess Shale from Anomalocaris to Hallucigenia to Pab the Snab a.k.a. Opabinia? They simply weren't known well enough: that big jelly may actually be the mouth of Peytoia, a radiodont related to Anomalocaris, which got misidentified as a jellyfish at one point:
It's unfortunate we didn't get to see any lobopods from Woodward. At least there are many other periods to cover like Ordovician:
It's hard to avoid wondering if people thought of Ordovician as the peaceful period of life, or even the boring one, with the most exciting things being graceful crinoids swaying in the waves and trilobites scittering on the sea floor. No terrifying sea scorpions or eldritch Orthoceras to haunt your nightmares.
I'm jumping right past Silurian and into Devonian, because that scene was already covered in an earlier Woodward Wednesday. Fish predictably make their first appearance (as earlier vertebrates had barely been discovered yet) in the form of placoderms and ostracoderms. There's even an ammonoid crawling on the sea floor next to Drepanaspis looking curiously like a Devonian roomba. Then again, that probably describes the feeding ecology of Drepanaspis pretty well.
The Permian marine life scene feels almost daring now, a century later. Just a bunch of regular fish and molluscs having a nice day in the sea, no rake toothed reptilians or rotary saw sharkoids or even the humble Hybodus to be seen. The temptation to make the illustrations more thrilling was surely a thing back then as much as it is now, but our standards have shifted. Aquariums were still a relatively new thing and hadn't quite made their big break into households, so these lifelike undersea scenes may have been far more exciting for an early 20th century reader.
Curiously, Evolution in the Past does not include any Carboniferous scenes illustrated by Alice Woodward. Why this is, I cannot tell. If you know of other sources of Carboniferous life depicted by her in some sources, please let me know.
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@iguanodont thank you so much for creating these wolf eel stickers I love them sooo much!! one handsome creature is now part of my vaguely blue-themed laptop sticker collection (rather awkwardly placed, but I liked how it looked next to the ammonoid lol)
PS what is the adorable glittery fish you drew? It seems super familiar but I can’t place it :0
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